The United Against Torture Consortium (
) calls for the Government of Georgia to ensure the cessation of violence against peaceful protesters, promptly and impartially investigate all credible allegations of torture and other ill-treatment by Georgian security forces against protesters and detainees, ensure guarantees of non-repetition and provide compensation for victims of human rights violations.Since mid-April 2024, at least 300 individuals have been detained in Georgia during a violent police crackdown on mass peaceful protests against the re-introduction of the Law on Transparency of Foreign Influence. Members and partners of UATC in Georgia report dozens of protesters have been severely beaten by masked police during arrests and in detention. A
of 12 Georgian NGOs that provide free legal aid services to protesters has qualified some of the incidences as torture. International human rights organisations have illegal, excessive use of force against protesters, including the use of tear gas, stun grenades, pepper spray, and water cannons.Activists have reported the use of
against protesters, and images allegedly from the protest show multiple projectile cartridges from Turkish arms manufacturer . According to , a member of UATC and an expert in using less-lethal weapons, law enforcement should never use multiple projectile ammunition. Such kinetic impact projectiles are inherently inaccurate and indiscriminate and do not comply with the UN Guidance on Less Lethal Weapons or the 2024 UN Model Protocol for Law Enforcement.The violent dispersal by police of the peaceful protests has been accompanied by a series of attacks on individual protesters by plain-clothes assailants, as well as criminal damage to the homes and offices of activists, which have been sprayed with hate message graffiti and threatening phone
, some to the children of activists.“This is the most violent crackdown by police since the 2007 protests,” said Lela Tsiskarishvili, former President of UATC, member of the International Rehabilitation Council for Victims of Torture (IRCT) and Executive Director of the Georgian Centre for Psychosocial and Medical Rehabilitation of Torture Victims. “Over the past decade, we have seen a marked decline in the practice of torture in Georgia. Current events raise serious concerns that apart from persecution of civil society representatives, activists, and opposition politicians, physical violence and ill-treatment will be used to silence and intimidate opponents of the ruling party.”
Branded the ‘Russian Law’ by protesters in Georgia for its similarities to the many Kremlin-backed laws that have been used to decimate Russian civil society over the past
, the Law on Transparency of Foreign Influence requires media and NGOs to register as “pursuing the interests of a foreign power” if they receive more than 20 per cent of their funding from abroad, and then submit onerous paperwork to the Ministry of Justice or face crippling fines. The ‘foreign agent’ law was this week vetoed by Georgia’s President but is set to pass through parliament on a final vote.Tsiskarishvili warned implementation of the law would immediately threaten the confidential medical information of torture survivors, victims of domestic violence and sexual abuse, and human rights defenders facing persecution. Torture is prohibited under Georgia’s 1995 Constitution and through its ratification of the UN Convention Against Torture and the European Convention on Human Rights.
Signatories:
The United Against Torture Consortium (UATC) is an EU-funded project that pools the strengths and expertise of six international anti-torture organisations in partnership with over 200 civil society organisations and other partners in 100+ countries to strengthen and expand torture prevention, protection, rehabilitation and strategic litigation.
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